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Discover Ludwig"bring horror" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English.
It means to cause fear, terror, or extreme anxiety. Example: The horrifying news of the massacre brought horror to the small town.
Exact(7)
The real issue was allowing the victims to tell their stories and show that such things that bring horror to us all do go on.
The quarter-section Troels has chosen for him will bring Harry great happiness, and a neighbour whom he comes to love, but it will also bring horror, death and incarceration.
And I find love does bring horror at a personal level - the vulnerable joys it offers, panic me right to my shoes but even so, I do think there's a place for love in the public domain.
To really bring horror back this Halloween, we compiled 6 of the most terrifying tales in Latin American and Latino folklore.
And in case that's not enough, a brief excursion into the realms of Halloween horror as the CFQ Podcast Crew explores the subject of seasonal haunted house attractions that bring horror movies to life.
My advice to young people who are considering becoming involved in extremism is that they're about to make the biggest mistakes of their lives and bring horror to innocent people.
Similar(52)
Full of hubris, he "pursued nature to her hiding places," bringing horror upon his family and community.
And the Twilight machine has brought horror – sparkly and with chiselled cheekbones, of course – to a whole new audience.
The jet fighter is falling in flames, bringing horror to what appears to be an air show.
Dracula (Terence Fisher, 1958) Mould-breaking Gothic blood feast that brought horror movies out of the cobwebby black-and-white closet and into gore-soaked living colour.
The BBC's June Kelly looks back at the events that brought horror to the streets of Woolwich last May.
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